A clock recovery circuit and a method for reducing electromagnetic emission (EMI) and increasing an attainable clock frequency includes a spread spectrum clock (SSC) generator that receives an input clock signal and generates a frequency-modulated clock signal, and a zero-delay buffer circuit that receives and buffers said modulated clock frequency signed to generated an output clock signal. The frequency-modulated clock signal and the output clock signal are phase-aligned such that there is no phase difference between the output clock signal and the modulated frequency clock signal. The clock recovery circuit also includes a delay-locked loop (DLL) circuit that reduces related art jitter and skew characteristics, and a phase detector circuit that eliminates phase ambiguity problems of a related art phase detector.

Patent
   6993109
Priority
Nov 18 1999
Filed
Aug 30 2002
Issued
Jan 31 2006
Expiry
Dec 24 2019
Extension
36 days
Assg.orig
Entity
Small
24
19
all paid
18. A method for generating clock signals, comprising:
generating a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread spectrum clock generator;
detecting a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first clock signal; and modifying the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein said modifying includes: coarsely tuning the second clock signal by a first total delay amount based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal, and finely tuning the second clock signal by a second total delay amount, and
wherein coarsely tuning the second clock signal includes:
determining the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal;
determining a delay time of the second clock signal; and
comparing the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal and the delay time of the second clock signal, said coarse tuning being performed based on a result of the comparison.
20. A method for generating clock signals, comprising:
generating a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread spectrum clock generator;
detecting a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first clock signal; and modifying the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein said modifying includes: coarsely tuning the second clock signal by a first total delay amount based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal, and finely tuning the second clock signal by a second total delay amount, and
wherein coarsely tuning the second clock signal includes:
converting the period of the first clock signal into a first digital signal using a first time-to-digital converter;
converting a delay of the second clock signal into a second digital signal using a second time-to-digital converter; and
coarsely tuning the second clock signal based on a comparison of the first and second digital signals.
15. A system for generating clock signals, comprising:
a delay-locked loop which generates a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread-spectrum clock generator, said loop including
a phase detector which determines a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal; and
a voltage-controlled delay chain circuit which generates a first control signal for delaying the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein the voltage-controlled delay chain circuit generates the first control signal based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal, and wherein the voltage-controlled delay chain circuit includes:
a first time-to-digital converter which converts the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal into a first digital signal,
a second time-to-digital converter which converts the delay of the second clock signal into a second digital signal, and
a controller which generates the first control signal for delaying the second clock signal based on a comparison of the first and second digital signals.
1. A method for generating clock signals, comprising:
generating a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread-spectrum clock generator;
detecting a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal; and
delaying the second clock signal based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein said delaying includes:
(a) measuring the period of the first modulated clock signal;
(b) measuring a delay between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal; and
(c) generating a first control signal to adjust the delay of the second clock signal, to thereby reduce mis-alignment between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal, based on results of (a) and (b), wherein the delaying further includes:
(d) generating a second control signal from a phase detector to adjust the delay of the second clock signal to thereby reduce mis-alignment between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal, said phase detector also detecting said phase difference.
10. A method for generating clock signals, comprising:
generating a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread spectrum clock generator;
detecting a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first clock signal; and
modifying the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein said modifying includes: coarsely tuning the second clock signal by a first total delay amount based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal, and finely tuning the second clock signal by a second total delay amount,
wherein the first clock signal and the second clock signal are digital signals, the first total delay amount is at least one of a plurality of first amounts, the second total delay amount is at least one of a plurality second amounts, with the second amounts being less than the first amounts, and
wherein said coarse tuning includes:
(a) measuring the period of the first clock signal,
(b) measuring a delay between the second clock signal and the first clock signal, and
(c) reducing mis-alignment between the second clock signal and the first clock signal by the first total delay amount based on results of (a) and (b).
13. A method for generating clock signals, comprising:
generating a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread-spectrum clock generator;
detecting a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal; and
delaying the second clock signal based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein said delaying comprises:
determining the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal;
determining a delay time of the second clock signal; and
delaying the second clock signal based on a comparison of the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal and the delay time of the second clock signal, and
wherein the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal is determined by calculating a number of delay taps in the first frequency modulated clock signal, and the delay time of the second clock signal is determined by calculating a number of delay taps in the second clock signal, and wherein the second clock signal is delayed based on a comparison of the numbers of delay taps calculated for the first frequency modulated clock signal and the second clock signal.
9. A system for generating clock signals, comprising:
a delay-locked loop which generates a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread-spectrum clock generator, said loop including
a phase detector which determines a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal and
a voltage-controlled delay chain circuit which generates a first control signal for delaying the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein the voltage-controlled delay chain circuit generates the first control signal based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal, and includes:
(a) a first circuit which measures the period of the first modulated clock signal; and
(b) a second circuit which measures a delay between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal, and
(c) a controller which generates the first control signal to delay the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference based on said delay and said measured period,
wherein the phase detector generates a second control signal to reduce said phase difference, and wherein the first control signal delays the second clock signal by a first amount and the second control signal delays the second clock signal by a second amount, where the first amount is greater than the second amount.
14. A system for generating clock signals, comprising:
a delay-locked loop which generates a second clock signal based on a first frequency modulated clock signal output from a spread-spectrum clock generator, said loop including
a phase detector which determines a phase difference between the second clock signal and the first modulated clock signal and
a voltage-controlled delay chain circuit which generates a first control signal for delaying the second clock signal to reduce said phase difference, wherein the voltage-controlled delay chain circuit generates the first control signal based on a period of the first frequency modulated clock signal and wherein the voltage-controlled delay chain circuit generates the first control signal by:
(a) determining the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal;
(b) determining a delay time of the second clock signal; and
(c) comparing the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal and the delay time of the second clock signal, and
wherein the voltage-controlled delay chain circuit determines the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal by calculating a number of delay taps in the first frequency modulated clock signal, determines the delay time of the second clock signal by calculating a number of delay taps in the second clock signal, and generates the first control signal based on a comparison of the numbers of delay taps calculated for the first frequency modulated clock signal and the second clock signal.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein said generating includes delaying the second clock signal relative to the first modulated clock signal.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the second control signal delays the second clock signal relative to the first clock signal by a first amount of time.
4. The method of claim 3, wherein the first control signal delays the second clock signal relative to the first modulated clock signal by a second amount of time greater than the first amount of time.
5. The method of claim 4, wherein the second clock signal is delayed by the first amount of time by a fine tuning delay line and is delayed by the second amount of time by a coarse tuning delay line.
6. The method of claim 5, wherein (a) is performed by a first time-to-digital converter which converts the period of the first clock signal into a first digital signal, and (b) is performed by a second time-to-digital converter which converts the delay of the second clock signal into a second digital signal, and wherein a controller generates the first control signal for adjusting the coarse tuning line based on a comparison of the first and second digital signals.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the first modulated clock signal is generated from a processor located on a motherboard of a computer.
8. The method of claim 7, further comprising:
operating a peripheral device based on the modified second clock signal.
11. The method of claim 10, wherein said fine tuning includes generating a control signal from a phase detector to delay the second clock signal by the second total delay amount, thereby reducing mis-alignment between the second clock signal and the first clock signal.
12. The method of claim 10, wherein the second clock signal is modified to reduce said phase difference to substantially zero.
16. The system of claim 15, wherein the phase detector generates a second control signal for delaying the second clock signal.
17. The system of claim 16, wherein the first control signal adjusts a coarse delay and the second control signal adjusts a fine delay of the second clock signal.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the period of the first frequency modulated clock signal is determined by calculating a number of delay taps in the first frequency modulated clock signal, the delay time of the second clock signal is determined by calculating a number of delay taps in the second clock signal, and said comparing includes comparing the numbers of delay taps calculated for the first frequency modulated clock signal and the second clock signal.

This application is a Continuation of application Ser. No. 09/442,751 filed Nov. 18, 1999 now U.S. Pat. No. 6,731,667.

1. Field of the Invention

The present invention relates to a zero-buffer circuit for a spread spectrum clock (SSC) system and a method therefor and more specifically, to a zero-delay buffer circuit having a delay-locked loop (DLL) based zero-delay buffer.

2. Background of the Related Art

In a related art of improving computer system efficiency, it is desirable to increase a processing speed by operating a central processing unit (CPU) at a higher frequency by increasing a clock frequency. An increase in clock frequency increases a frequency of the computer system, as peripherals (e.g., memory, graphic card) can also operate at a higher frequency. However, as the clock frequency increases, electromagnetic emission (EMI) increases due to an increased peak amplitude. As a result, EMI limits clock frequency improvements in the related art.

A related art technique known as spread spectrum clocking (SSC) reduces EMI and allows for an increased clock frequency by modulating the clock frequency along a modulation profile having a predetermined frequency. Because amplitude is reduced by the frequency modulation, EMI can be reduced while allowing an increase in the clock frequency. FIG. 1 illustrates a non-modulated spectral energy distribution 3 compared to the related art SSC frequency-modulated spectral energy distribution 1. A magnitude Δ of EMI reduction is determined by a modulation amount δ and a shape of the SSC spectral energy distribution 1.

FIG. 2 illustrates a related art modulation profile 9 used with the SSC technique. An SSC clock is modulated between a nominal frequency 5 of the constant-frequency clock fnom, and a down-spreading frequency (1−δ) fnom 7, where δ represents a spreading magnitude as a percentage of the nominal frequency fnom 5. The modulation profile 9 determines the shape of the SSC spectral energy distribution 1.

FIG. 3 illustrates a related art computer system that applies the related art SSC technique. In a motherboard 15, an SSC generator 11 receives an unmodulated clock input signal and generates a frequency-modulated clock signal in a first phase-locked loop (PLL) 13. The frequency-modulated clock signal is transmitted to a central processing unit (CPU) 17 and a peripheral board 19.

FIG. 4 illustrates a block diagram of the SSC generator 11. A first divider 49 receives the unmodulated clock input signal and generates an output received by the first PLL 13. In the first PLL 13, a first phase detector 35 receives an output signal of the first divider 49 and an input signal from a feedback divider 43 to generate an output signal that provides a measurement of a phase difference between the unmodulated clock input signal and the frequency-modulated signal. A first charge pump 37 receives the output signal of the first phase detector 35. The first charge pump 37 then generates charges in response to the output signal of the first phase detector 35. When a first loop filter 39 receives the charges from the first charge pump 37, the first loop filter 39 produces a DC voltage output. The DC voltage output of the first loop filter 39 is received by a first voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) 41. The first VCO 41 generates an output signal to a post divider 45 and the feedback divider 43. The post divider 45 then generates the frequency-modulated clock signal that is transmitted to the CPU 17 and the peripheral board 19, and the feedback divider 43 generates a reference signal for the first phase detector 35.

As shown in FIG. 3, the peripheral board 19 further processes the frequency-modulated clock signal in a zero-delay clock buffer 21 to generate an output clock signal for a peripheral device 23 (e.g., SDRAM, accelerated graphics port, etc.). The zero-delay clock buffer 21 includes a second PLL 25 having a second phase detector and a frequency detector 27, a second charge pump 29, a second loop filter 31, and a second voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) 33.

However, the related art SSC technique has various disadvantages. For example, a jitter problem occurs due to a difference in period between a maximum frequency and a minimum frequency. As the input clock signal migrates from the non-modulated frequency over the modulation period, a change in period size occurs over clock cycles during a modulation event.

A skew problem also exists in the related art SSC technique due to a period difference between the frequency-modulated clock signal and the output clock signal. Because the output clock cannot be updated instantaneously, a period difference between the frequency-modulated clock signal from the motherboard 15 and the output clock signal to the peripheral device 23 develops. The cumulative effect of the period difference results in a significant phase error known as skew.

The skew and jitter of the related art SSC technique can be reduced by maximizing a bandwidth of the feedback loop in the second PLL 25 and minimizing a phase angle of an input-to-output transfer function of the modulation frequency. FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate a relationship between increased feedback loop bandwidth, decreased phase angle, and decreased skew. However, even the related art SSC technique having optimized feedback loop bandwidth and phase angle still has the jitter and skew errors as discussed in Zhang, Michael T., Notes on SSC and Its Timing Impacts, Rev. 1.0, February 1998, pp. 1–8, which is incorporated by reference. Thus, the jitter and skew problems limit the clock frequency improvements that can be achieved by the related art SSC technique.

The above references are incorporated by reference herein where appropriate for appropriate teachings of additional or alternative details, features and/or technical background.

An object of the invention is to solve at least the related art problems and disadvantages, and to provide at least the advantages described hereinafter.

An object of the present invention is to provide an improved zero-delay buffer circuit and a method therefor.

Another object of the present invention is to improve the efficiency.

A further object of the invention is to minimize a reduces electromagnetic emission (EMI).

An object of the present invention is to also minimize the jitter.

Another object of the present invention is to minimize a skew error.

Still another object of the present invention is to minimize a delay for clock skew elimination.

It is another object of the present invention to provide a phase detector that eliminates a phase ambiguity problem.

A zero-delay buffer circuit for generating an output clock signal having a reduced EMI includes a spread spectrum clock (SSC) generator circuit that receives an input clock signal and generates a modulated frequency clock signal, and a zero-delay buffer circuit that receives and buffers said modulated frequency clock signal to generate an output clock signal, the zero-delay buffer circuit aligning a phase of the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal such that there is no phase difference between the output clock signal and the modulated frequency clock signal.

A delay-locked loop circuit embodying the present invention further includes a phase detector that receives a modulated frequency clock signal, measures a phase difference between the modulated clock frequency signal and the output clock signal, and generates phase detector outputs; a charge pump circuit coupled to the phase detector device, wherein the charge pump circuit receives the phase detector outputs and generates charges; a loop filter circuit coupled to the charge pump, wherein the loop filter circuit receives the charges and generates a DC voltage output; and a voltage controlled delay chain (VCDC) circuit coupled to the loop filter and the phase detector, wherein the VCDC circuit aligns phases of the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal.

A phase detection device embodying the present invention includes a first phase detector circuit that receives a modulated frequency clock signal and generates first and second pulse signals, wherein the first and second pulse signals measure on of a rising edge and a falling edge of the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal, respectively; a second phase detector circuit that receives the modulated frequency clock signal and generates third and fourth pulse signals, wherein the third and fourth pulse signals measure one of the rising edge and the falling edge of the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal, respectively; and a signal divider circuit to alternatively operate the first and second phase detector circuit, memory states of the first phase detector circuit and the second phase detector circuit are periodically reset.

A method embodying the present invention includes the steps of generating a modulated frequency clock signal based on spread spectrum modulation having an amplitude less than an amplitude the input clock signal; and aligning a phase of the modulated frequency clock signal with the output clock signal to eliminate phase differences between the output clock signal and the modulated frequency clock signal.

Additional advantages, objects, and features of the invention will be set forth in part in the description which follows and in part will become apparent to those having ordinary skill in the art upon examination of the following or may be learned from practice of the invention. The objects and advantages of the invention may be realized and attained as particularly pointed out in the appended claims.

The invention will be described in detail with reference to the following drawings in which like reference numerals refer to like elements wherein:

FIG. 1 illustrates a spectral energy distribution curve for a fundamental harmonic of related art spread spectrum clocking (SSC) and non-SSC clocks;

FIG. 2 illustrates a related art SSC modulation profile;

FIG. 3 illustrates a block diagram of the related art SSC system architecture;

FIG. 4 illustrates a block diagram of the related art SSC generator having a phase-locked loop (PLL) circuit;

FIGS. 5 and 6 illustrate a relationship between feedback loop bandwidth, phase angle and skew for the related art SSC technique;

FIGS. 7a and 7b illustrate a phase ambiguity problem of the related art phase detector;

FIG. 8 illustrates a block diagram of a clock recovery circuit according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 9 illustrates a block diagram of a voltage controlled delay-chain (VCDC) circuit according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIGS. 10(a)–10(d) illustrate an operation of the DLL circuit according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIGS. 11a and 11b illustrate a time-to-digital converter (TDC) according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 12 illustrates an operation of the TDC according the preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 13 illustrates a block diagram of the DLL circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 14 illustrates an operation of the DLL circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 15 illustrates a block diagram of the coarse delay line circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 16 illustrates a block diagram of the controller circuit with a lock detector circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 17 illustrates a coarse tuning operation according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 18 illustrates a block diagram of a fine delay line circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention;

FIG. 19 illustrates a phase detector according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 20 illustrates an operation of the phase detector according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention.

FIG. 8 illustrates a block diagram of a spread spectrum clocking (SSC) clock system circuit according to a preferred embodiment of the present invention. A motherboard 83, a SSC generator 78, a PLL circuit 81 and a CPU 77 are included. A peripheral board 75 includes a zero-delay clock buffer circuit 68 having a delay-locked loop (DLL) circuit 69. The zero-delay clock buffer circuit 68 receives a frequency-modulated clock signal from the SSC generator 78 and outputs an output clock signal to a peripheral device (e.g., SDRAM, accelerated graphics port, etc.) 76. The DLL circuit 69 includes a phase detector 71, a charge pump 72, a loop filter 73, and a voltage controlled delay-chain (VCDC) circuit 74

FIG. 9 illustrates a block diagram of the voltage controlled delay-chain (VCDC) circuit 74 according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The VCDC circuit 74 includes a first time-to-digital converter (TDC) 85 coupled to a first register 87, and a second TDC 89 coupled to a second register 91. The first and second registers 87, 91 are coupled to a controller 93, which is coupled to a first coarse delay line circuit 95 and a first fine delay line circuit 97. The phase detector 71 is coupled to the charge pump 72 and the loop filter 73, and is also coupled to the first fine delay line circuit 97. The first fine delay line circuit 97 is also coupled to a clock buffer 99, which is coupled to the second TDC 89 and the peripheral device 76.

In a preferred method embodying the present invention, the phase detector 71 receives the frequency-modulated clock signal received from the SSC generator 78. The phase detector 71 then detects a phase difference between the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal, and outputs a pulse signal to the charge pump 72. The charge pump 72 creates a charge based on the pulse signal from the phase detector 71, and outputs a signal to the loop filter 73. The loop filter 73 then outputs a voltage signal to the VCDC circuit 74, where the phase difference detected by the phase detector 71 is eliminated. The VCDC circuit 74 then produces an output signal that is transmitted to a feedback loop and a peripheral device 76.

In the method embodying the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the VCDC circuit 74 operates as follows. The first TDC 85 receives and measures a period of the modulated frequency clock signal and converts the measured period into a first digital output signal. The first register 87 receives and stores the digital output of the first TDC 85. The second TDC receives an output of the clock buffer circuit 99, and measures a total delay time of the first coarse delay line circuit 95 and the first fine delay line circuit 97. The total delay time is converted into a second digital output signal that is received and stored in the second register 91. The controller 93 receives the first and second digital output signals from the first and second registers 87, 91, and generates a control signal that is transmitted to the first coarse delay line circuit 95.

FIGS. 10(a)–10(d) illustrate an operation of the DLL circuit 69 according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The first coarse delay line circuit 95 delays the output clock signal based on the control signal and transmits an output signal to the first fine delay line circuit 97. The first fine delay line circuit 97 receives an output of the phase detector 71 and finely tunes the delay by aligning rising edges of the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal. In alternative embodiments of the present invention, falling edges of the modulated frequency clock signal and the output clock signal may be used for alignment.

FIGS. 11a and 11b illustrate a TDC according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. As shown in FIG. 11a, the TDC includes a tapped delay line 101 having a plurality of taps, a plurality of samplers 103, and a multiplexer 105. As shown in FIG. 11b, each of the taps 101a includes a buffer 107a that receives an input signal and generates an output signal transmitted to a subsequent tap 101b and a corresponding flip flop gate 109a that serves as the sample 103. The flip flop gate 109a also receives the input signal, and generates an output sample signal. Each of the delay taps 101a are coupled in series to a subsequent delay tap 101b, and a last delay tap is coupled to the multiplexer 105. Similarly, the output sample signals are coupled to the multiplexer 105. The multiplexer than produces a digital output signal.

FIG. 12 illustrates an operation of the TDCs according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. A duration of an input signal is measured by calculating the number of delay taps in the input signal. In the preferred embodiment of the present invention, the input signal of the first TDC is the modulated frequency signal, and the input signal of the second TDC is the output clock signal. As each of the delay taps produces a delayed version of the input signal, corresponding delayed edges are produced at each tap of the delay line. Thus, the D flip-flop gate 109 coupled to the delay tap 101 samples the data. When the delay time is less than the duration of the input signal, the value of the sampler output is set to “1.” In FIG. 14, the delay time is less than the input signal for an interval of four delay taps. Thus, the sampler output is set to “1” until T[5], when the sampler output changes to “0.” The sampler output signal produces a time value that is converted to a digital value by the multiplexer 105. Accordingly, the time value is then stored in the registers 87, 91.

FIG. 13 illustrates the DLL circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention, wherein the first and second TDCs 85, 89 have been replaced by a delayed pulse generator 27 and a second delay circuit 29, respectively. The second delay circuit 29 includes a second coarse delay line circuit 31, a second fine delay line circuit 32, and a dummy clock buffer 33 that are substantially similar to a first delay circuit 30 including the first coarse delay line circuit 95, the first fine delay line circuit 97, and the clock buffer circuit 99. Further, the second delay circuit 29 and the first delay circuit 30 share common control nodes in the DLL circuit 25. The dummy clock buffer 33 preferably has substantially the same delay as the clock buffer circuit 99. Thus, a nominal delay of the second delay circuit 29 approaches the delay between the frequency modulated clock signal iCLK to the output clock signal oCLK.

FIG. 14 illustrates an operation of the DLL circuit according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention. The input to the delayed pulse generator 27 is represented by idCLK while IDIVCLK and divCLK[i] represent first and second outputs, respectively, of the delayed pulse generator 27 coupled to the second delay circuit 29 where I equals a number of second output signals. Dummy delay elements 26a, 26b match a delay of the first delay circuit 29 output oREPCLK. Each output divCLK[i] of the delayed pulse generator 27 to the controller 93 is aligned with a rising edge of the delayed frequency modulated clock signal idCLK. Additional delay elements 137a, 137b, 137c, 137d are coupled in series to delay an output of the dummy clock buffer 33, as shown in FIG. 13. Preferably, two delay elements 137a, 137b are counterparts to the dummy delay elements 26a, 26b to output oREPCLK.

FIG. 15 illustrates a block diagram of the second coarse delay line circuit 31. A N:1 multiplexer 63 selects a tap, for example tap 61, from a plurality of taps, and the selected tap 61 is input to the second fine delay line circuit 32. The tap selection is controlled by an UP counter coupled to the multiplexer 63. The UP counter moves the selected tap 61 to a direction of increasing delay time during the coarse tuning operation, and initialized to have a minimum value at the start of the coarse tuning operation. Thus, it is possible to achieve phase lock with only the UP counter, and an UP/DOWN counter is not required. As a result, jitter can be reduced by engaging a smaller number or the smallest number of taps 61 for phase locking.

FIG. 16 illustrates a block diagram of the controller 93 according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention. Each of a plurality of lock detectors 64 . . . 64n includes first and second D flip-flops 65a, 65b that receive first and second outputs of the second delay circuit 29 oREP1CLK, oREP2CLK that are compared to the first output divCLK[1] of the delayed pulse generator 27. The number of lock detectors preferably equals the number of second output signals divCLK[i] transmitted from the delayed pulse generator 27 to the controller 93. The two delayed outputs oREP1CLK, oREP2CLK form a sampling window that indicates that the coarse locking process has been completed. Because the coarse locking process locates a delayed output oREPCLK in the vicinity of the delayed frequency modulated clock signal idCLK, the coarse locking process has been accomplished when the sampled values at each of the D flip-flops 65a, 65b differs from each other.

An output of each of the D flip-flops 65a, 65b is input to a NOR gate 67, and an output of the NOR gate 67 forms an output of the lock detector 64 CLOCK[1]. Each lock detector output CLOCK[i] is output to a corresponding input node of a (N+1)-input AND gate 131, which is coupled to the UP counter 133. The UP counter 133 is disabled when one of the lock detector outputs CLOCK[i] has a zero value, and a value of the UP counter 133 increases when a low-to-high transition of oSPCLK increases a delay of the output of the second delay circuit oREPCLK. The second delayed output of the second delay circuit 29 oREP2CLKis delayed to produce an output oSPCLK that accounts for a timing margin required to operate the UP counter 133.

An initial delay time of the delayed output of the second delay circuit 29 oREPCLK should be less than the delay time of a last delayed pulse required to achieve coarse lock. Otherwise, coarse locking cannot be achieved because no lock detector 64 output CLOCK[i] equals zero. The delay time of the delayed output oREPCLK of the second delay circuit 29 should be less than half of the delay time of the delay pulse generator 27 output IDIVCLK that is the input of the second delay circuit 29. The actual number of delay pulses is determined by an operating speed and a coarse estimation to the time from the frequency modulated clock signal iCLK to the output clock signal oCLK.

FIG. 17 illustrates operations of the coarse tuning operation. Here, the lock window is between the first and second delayed pulse generator outputs divCLK[1], divCLK[2]. Because the lock detector circuit 64 outputs CLOCK[i] equal 1, the second delay circuit 29 output oREPCLK is increased. After several comparison cycles, the divCLK[2] is in the locking window, and the coarse tuning operation is stopped.

FIG. 18 illustrates a block diagram of the first fine delay line circuit 97, according to another preferred embodiment of the present invention. After the coarse tuning operation has been completed for the first coarse delay line circuit 95, the phase detector 71 adjusts the delay time of the first fine delay line circuit 97 to achieve a phase lock between the frequency modulated clock signal iCLK and the output clock signal oCLK. The phase detector 71 produces UP and DOWN pulses, and a pulse width depends on the phase difference of those two signals. The charge pump circuit 72 and attached loop filter 73 convert the phase difference into the control voltage. A fine delay line circuit output is then transmitted to the clock buffer 99.

The loop filter 73 of the DLL circuit is usually of the first order, and thus the overall loop of the DLL circuit is also first order. As is known in the related art, the first order loop has no stability problem and thus the loop band width of the DLL circuit can be made as large as necessary. Thus, jitter and skew can be minimized or eliminated when the DLL circuit is used as a zero delay buffer in the SSC environment.

Further, a phase ambiguity problem exists when a related art phase detector is applied to the zero-delay clock buffer circuit 21 illustrated in FIG. 8. FIG. 7 illustrates an operation of the related art phase detector circuit 27a. The operation of the phase detector circuit 27a is directly affected by a sequence of the rising edge of an input clock signal ICLK and an output clock signal oCLK. As shown in FIG. 7a, the phase detector generates a first pulse signal UP indicating a rising edge of the input clock signal ICLK, and a second pulse signal DOWN indicating a rising edge of the output clock signal oCLK, to calculate the phase difference. When a pulse width of the first pulse signal UP is generated first, phase tracking is performed in the wrong direction. However, FIG. 7b shows that phase tracking is performed in the correct direction when the second pulse signal DOWN is generated first. Thus, an incorrect phase difference output may result in the related art phase detector circuit.

FIG. 19 illustrates the phase detector 71 according to the preferred embodiment of the present invention. The phase detector 71 includes a first phase detector circuit and a second phase detector circuit coupled to a signal divider circuit. The first and second phase detector circuits can be in either a “reset” or an “operational” mode, and the mode of the first phase detector circuit must differ from the mode of the second detector circuit, wherein the mode is determined by an output of the signal divider.

The first phase detector circuit includes first and second D flip-flops 111,113, a first AND gate 121 and a first OR gate 125, and the second phase detector circuit includes third and fourth D flip-flops 115,117, a second AND gate 123 and a second OR gate 127. The signal divider circuit includes a fifth D flip-flop 119 coupled to the first phase detector circuit and the second phase detector circuit.

In the first phase detector circuit, the first D flip-flop 111 is coupled to the modulated frequency clock signal ICLK and generates a first pulse signal UP 1, and the second D flip-flop 113 is coupled to the output clock signal oCLK and generates a second pulse signal DOWN 1. The first and second D flip-flops 111,113 are also commonly coupled to an output of the first OR gate 125 and a clear signal “1”. The first and second pulse signals UP 1, DOWN 1 are also input signals to the first AND gate 121, and the first AND gate 121 generates an output signal received by a first input of the first OR gate 125.

In the second phase detector circuit, the third D flip-flop 115 is coupled to the modulated frequency clock signal ICLK and generates a third pulse signal UP 2, and the fourth D flip-flop 117 is coupled to the output clock signal OCLK and generates a fourth pulse signal DOWN 2. The third and fourth D flip-flops 115,117 are also commonly coupled to an output of the second OR gate 127 and a clear signal “1”. The third and fourth pulse signals UP 2, DOWN 2 are also input signals to the second AND gate 123, and the second AND gate 123 generates an output signal received by a first input of the second OR gate 127.

To set the mode of the first and second phase detector circuits, the fifth D flip-flop 119 is coupled to an inverted signal of the modulated frequency clock signal ICLK as a signal divider circuit. The fifth D flip-flop 119 generates a first divider output signal divQ and an opposite second divider output signal divQB. A second input of the first OR gate 125 receives the first divider output signal divQ of the fifth D flip-flop 119, to determine if the first phase detector circuit is in the “reset” mode or the “operational” mode, and a second input of the second OR gate 127 receives the second divider output signal divQB of the fifth D flip-flop 119 to determine if the second phase detector circuit is in the “reset” mode or the “operational” mode.

FIG. 20 illustrates an operation of the phase detector 71 according to the method embodying the present invention. When the first divider output signal divQ of the fifth D flip-flop 119 is set to “1,” the second divider output signal divQB of the fifth D flip-flop 119 is set to “0”. Correspondingly, the first phase detector circuit is in the “reset” mode and the second phase detector circuit is in the “operational” mode, and the first and second pulse signals UP 1, DOWN 1 are set to “0” at a first time t1. The second phase detector circuit generates the third pulse signal UP 2 when the modulated frequency clock signal value of “1” is detected, and generates the fourth pulse signal DOWN 2 when the output clock signal value of “1” is detected. Thus, the charge pump 72 generates the output signal based on the input values generated by the phase detector 71. When the first and second divider output signals div Q, div QB are reversed at a second time t2, the first phase detector circuit is in the “operational” mode and the second phase detector circuit is in the “reset” mode.

The improved clock recovery circuit and method therefor embodying the present invention has various advantages. The zero-delay buffer circuit using DLL has inherently low jitter and low skew compared with the related art zero-delay buffer using PLL.

Further, because the signal divider of the phase detector periodically resets the first and second phase detection circuits to clear their memories, phase tracking is performed in the correct direction. Thus, the related art problem of phase ambiguity is eliminated.

The foregoing embodiments and advantages are merely exemplary and are not to be construed as limiting the present invention. The present teaching can be readily applied to other types of apparatuses. The description of the present invention is intended to be illustrative, and not to limit the scope of the claims. Many alternatives, modifications, and variations will be apparent to those skilled in the art. In the claims, means-plus-function clauses are intended to cover the structures described herein as performing the recited function and not only structural equivalents but also equivalent structures.

Lee, Kyeongho, Park, Joonbae

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